102 results on '"J, Mang"'
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2. Ce que vous nous avez dit: Résultats de notre sondage de janvier 2022 auprès des membres
- Author
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Francine Lemire and Eric J. Mang
- Subjects
Collège ,General Medicine ,Family Practice - Published
- 2022
3. Influence of Cilostazol on Changes in Cyclin D1 Expression in Cerebral Cortex of Rats with Chronic Cerebral Ischemia
- Author
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Y. Liu, A-X Wei, Y Sun, Z-X Xu, M-Y Shao, J Mang, L-M Wang, and X-Y Ma
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Ischemia ,Morris water navigation task ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cyclin D1 ,Memory ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Animals ,Common carotid artery ,Rats, Wistar ,Maze Learning ,Cerebral Cortex ,business.industry ,Articles ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cilostazol ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Neuroprotective Agents ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cerebral cortex ,Apoptosis ,Chronic Disease ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The influence of cilostazol on learning and memory, and cyclin D1 expression in the cerebral cortex of rats with chronic cerebral ischemia were investigated. A chronic cerebral ischemia model was established using the permanent bilateral common carotid artery occlusion method (2VO), learning and memory capacity was detected using the Morris water maze, and expression changes in apoptosis regulating gene cyclin D1 were tested by RT-PCR. Results of the Morris water maze indicated that significant extensions were found in the escape latent period and swimming path of rats in the ischemia group (2VO group), learning and memory results in the cilostazol group was obviously superior compared to the 2VO group (P
- Published
- 2020
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4. Nodal mitigates cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury via inhibiting oxidative stress and inflammation
- Author
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Y, Cui, J-Q, Wang, X-H, Shi, Y-Y, Wang, H-Y, Liu, Z, Li, Y, Dong, J, Mang, and Z-X, Xu
- Subjects
Inflammation ,Male ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Disease Models, Animal ,Mice ,Oxidative Stress ,Nodal Protein ,Reperfusion Injury ,Animals ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Cell Line ,Rats - Abstract
Nodal is a member of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) family, which induces the activation of the cytoplasmic Smad2 and Smad3, both of which play a neuroprotective role against cerebral ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. However, the role of Nodal in cerebral I/R is unclear. Thus, the aim of the present study was to shed light on the function of Nodal in cerebral I/R injury.Cerebral I/R injury was induced in the Sprague Dawley (SD) rats by middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and reperfusion and in murine hippocampal neuronal cells (HT22) by oxygen-glucose deprivation/reperfusion (OGD/R) stimulation. The lentivirus vectors (Nodal overexpressing lentivirus vector [OE-Nodal] and the short hair RNA of Nodal [sh-Nodal]) were used to upregulate and downregulate Nodal in SD rats or cells.Nodal expression increased in the cerebral I/R models and reached a peak after 12 h of reperfusion. OE-Nodal administration to the cerebral I/R rats significantly reduced the cerebral infarction volume and inhibited the brain cell apoptosis. It also increased the level of superoxide dismutase (SOD), an antioxidant enzyme, and decreased the levels of the lipid peroxides (malondialdehyde [MDA] and lactate dehydrogenase [LDH]), in addition to those of the proinflammatory factors. Consistently, the upregulation of Nodal in HT22 by OGD/R significantly increased the SOD level and decreased the levels of MDA, LDH, interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α).This study revealed that Nodal exerted a protective role during cerebral I/R by inhibiting excessive oxidative stress and inflammation.
- Published
- 2019
5. Effects of c-Jun N-terminal kinase on Activin A/Smads signaling in PC12 cell suffered from oxygen-glucose deprivation
- Author
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J Q, Wang, Z H, Xu, W Z, Liang, J T, He, Y, Cui, H Y, Liu, L X, Xue, W, Shi, Y K, Shao, J, Mang, and Z X, Xu
- Subjects
Anthracenes ,Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition ,Cell Survival ,Blotting, Western ,JNK Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases ,Cell Differentiation ,Smad Proteins ,PC12 Cells ,Cell Hypoxia ,Activins ,Rats ,Oxygen ,Glucose ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Nerve Growth Factor ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Activin A (Act A), a member of transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) superfamily, is an early gene in response to cerebral ischemia. Growing evidences confirm the neuroprotective effect of Act A in ischemic injury through Act A/Smads signal activation. In this process, regulation networks are involved in modulating the outcomes of Smads signaling. Among these regulators, crosstalk between c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and Smads signaling has been found in the TGF-β induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition. However, in neural ischemia, the speculative regulation between JNK and Act A/Smads signaling pathways has not been clarified. To explore this issue, an Oxygen Glucose Deprivation (OGD) model was introduced to nerve-like PC12 cells. We found that JNK signal activation occurred at the early time of OGD injury (1 h). Act A administration suppressed JNK phosphorylation. In addition, JNK inhibition could elevate the strength of Smads signaling and attenuate neural apoptosis after OGD injury. Our results indicated a negative regulation effect of JNK on Smads signaling in ischemic injury. Taken together, JNK, as a critical site for neural apoptosis and negative regulator for Act A/Smads signaling, was presumed to be a molecular therapeutic target for ischemia.
- Published
- 2015
6. Expression changes of Hes1 of PC12 cells after OGD
- Author
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J.-Q. Wang, L. Yan, J. Mang, Y.-K. Shao Z.-X. Xu, Y. Cui, Z.-S. Li, and J.-T. He
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Expression (architecture) ,Chemistry ,HES1 ,Cell biology - Published
- 2015
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7. Neuroprotective eects against ischemia injury derived from Smad7-modulated ActA/ Smads pathway activation
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J.-Q. Wang, Y.-T. Wang, Y.-M. Wang, J. Mang J.-T. He, C.-L. Mei, Z.-H. Xu, and Y.-K. Shao
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business.industry ,Ischemia ,Medicine ,Pharmacology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Neuroprotection - Published
- 2015
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8. Zur Theorie des α-Zerfalls
- Author
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H. J. Mang and H. J. Mang
- Subjects
- Physics, Astronomy
- Published
- 2013
9. The flow field and bare-spot formation in spin-up from rest of a two-layer fluid about a vertical axis
- Author
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J. Mang and Marius Ungarish
- Subjects
Physics ,Ekman layer ,Mechanical Engineering ,Rotational symmetry ,Mechanics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Boundary layer ,Classical mechanics ,Circular motion ,Mechanics of Materials ,Free surface ,Spin-up ,Layer (electronics) ,Dimensionless quantity - Abstract
The spin-up from rest of a two-layer fluid with a free surface in a cylindrical container rotating about a vertical axis is investigated for small Ekman numbers. Numerical results from the axisymmetric Navier–Stokes equations, supported by comparisons with improved boundary-layer approximations, show that the Ekman-type layer on the bottom pushes the dense fluid of the lower layer to the periphery, and consequently the interface between the layers curves upward near the sidewall and descends near the centre. When the lower layer of fluid is sufficiently thin a bare spot appears at the bottom, i.e. a region where the light fluid is in direct contact with the horizontal boundary. The lower-layer fluid is spun-up quickly by the bottom Ekman layer, but the angular motion in the upper layer is provided by the much weaker detached Ekman layer on the interface between the two fluids, and hence the global spin-up process is prolonged compared with the homogeneous fluid case. The influence of the various dimensionless parameters and the connection with the continuous stratified case are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
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10. Gravitational–centrifugal separation in an axisymmetric source–sink flow with a free surface
- Author
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Marius Ungarish, U. Schaflinger, and J. Mang
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Physics ,Ekman layer ,Buoyancy ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Reynolds number ,Mechanics ,Radius ,engineering.material ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,symbols.namesake ,Inviscid flow ,Free surface ,symbols ,engineering ,Cylinder ,Ekman number - Abstract
The inward source–sink flow of a dilute suspension with an upper free surface, in a cylinder with a horizontal solid bottom rotating about a vertical axis is analysed theoretically. The problem is made unique for the prescribed volume flux and outer radius by the requirement that the height of the interface at the outlet (drain) radius is minimal. A small Ekman number of the global flow and small Taylor and Reynolds numbers for the flow around the dispersed particles are assumed. The steady-state flow-field in the mixture bulk is described by an inviscid shallow water approximation. In addition, the influence of the horizontal shear layer at the bottom is incorporated by an Ekman-layer correlation. It turns out that in the investigated inward flow configuration, around the drain a domain may develop where the entire transport is performed by the Ekman layer. Theoretical predictions for the height of the fluid at the outer wall (position of the source) for various angular velocities are found to agree well with experimental results obtained earlier. The dispersed particles, assumed lighter than the fluid, separate from the main flow as a result of gravitational and centrifugal buoyancy. The numerical solution of the particle transport equation surprisingly shows that the concentration of the particles increases with the radius and, as expected, indicates the formation of a densely packed layer of particles on the top of the suspension.
- Published
- 2001
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11. Particle Entrainment in a Bounded Rotating Flow With a Drain
- Author
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U. H. Schaflinger, E. Minkov, Marius Ungarish, and J. Mang
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Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Flow (psychology) ,Mechanics ,Viscous liquid ,Elutriation ,Rotation ,Vortex ring ,Vortex ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Classical mechanics ,Condensed Matter::Superconductivity ,Burgers vortex ,Magnetosphere particle motion - Abstract
A bathtub vortex is usually formed at the axis of a drain. In the presence of such a vortex, gravity separation of solid impurities lighter than the embedding fluid is counteracted by centrifugal separation and viscous resuspension. Both mechanisms are responsible for the agglomeration of impurities at the axis of the vortex. From there the impurities are easily sucked into the outlet. In the investigated case, a viscous fluid with a given initial rotation is spinning down in a container with endplates both at the bottom and the top. The amount of fluid withdrawn through a circular hole in the center of the vortex is constantly replaced by a radial influx. The resulting time-dependent flow was solved by means of a finite difference method taking into account the influence of Ekman layers at the bottom and the top. Subsequently, the process of centrifugal separation of particles lighter than the embedding fluid was studied according to the aforementioned flow field. The results were compared with the particle motion in a classical Oseen vortex. For a simplified case an analytical solution was derived and compared with the corresponding numerical solution. Both results were found to be in good agreement.
- Published
- 1998
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12. Komplette vorzeitige Plazentalösung bei vorbestehender Präeklampsie - Ein Fallbericht
- Author
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Klaus Friese, J Mang, Julia Jückstock, M Dallmayr, and Harald Sommer
- Subjects
Maternity and Midwifery ,Obstetrics and Gynecology - Published
- 2013
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13. Apparent quadratic deformation scaling of transition strengths in samarium isotopes
- Author
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W. Höhenberger, H. J. Mang, and R.R. Hilton
- Subjects
Samarium ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Dipole ,Distribution (mathematics) ,Quadratic equation ,Mathematical model ,chemistry ,Isotope ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Atomic physics ,Deformation (meteorology) ,Scaling - Abstract
Recent experimental investigations of a sequence of samarium isotopes report an apparent quadratic deformation dependence of the total [ital B]([ital M]1) strength of low-lying 1[sup +] states. Considering these states as the fragmented distribution of a collective state, the angular analog to the giant dipole, it is demonstrated that such a deformation dependence arises quite naturally when short range correlations and surface effects are taken into account. The role of such additional parameters in determining the variation of the total transition strength is discussed and a comparison with the picture of pure contrarotation is made.
- Published
- 1993
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14. Glueballs as bound states of massive transverse gluons
- Author
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M H Thoma, M Lust, and H J Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Quantum chromodynamics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Bethe–Salpeter equation ,Glueball ,High Energy Physics::Lattice ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Massive particle ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Lambda ,Gluon ,Bound state ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Quantum field theory ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
It is shown how the glueball spectrum can be obtained from the Bethe-Salpeter equation using nonperturbative approximations. The masses are estimated to be (3.5+or-0.4) Lambda QCD for the 0+ and 2+ glueballs and (2.8+or-0.3) Lambda QCD for the 1- glueball.
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- 1992
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15. Formation of drug-bearing vesicles in mixed colloids of bile salts and phosphatidylcholine
- Author
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R.P. Hjelm, J. Mang, A.F. Hofmann, S. Ayd, H. Alkan-Onyuksel, and C. Schteingart
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Drug ,Liposome ,Bearing (mechanical) ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Cholesterol ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Vesicle ,Neutron spectra ,law.invention ,Colloid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Phosphatidylcholine ,Polymer chemistry ,media_common - Published
- 1997
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16. Liability of peer review participants--a clue to the puzzle
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H J, Mang
- Subjects
Malpractice ,Liability, Legal ,Hospital Mortality ,Cardiac Surgical Procedures ,Hospitals, General ,Louisiana - Published
- 1997
17. Malpractice liability and managed care--a Hobson's choice?
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H J, Mang
- Subjects
Cost Control ,Managed Care Programs ,Humans ,Female ,Liability, Legal ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,California - Published
- 1996
18. Numerical investigation of the spin-up of a two-layer fluid
- Author
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J. Mang, U. Schaflinger, and M. Ungarish
- Subjects
Materials science ,Applied Mathematics ,Flow (psychology) ,Computational Mechanics ,Rotational symmetry ,Mixing (process engineering) ,Finite difference ,Two layer ,Vertical axis ,Mechanics ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Classical mechanics ,Free surface ,Spin-up - Abstract
The spin-up of a two-layer fluid with a free surface in a cylindrical container rotating about a vertical axis is investigated numerically, using axisymmetric finite differences. As Linden & van Heijst (1984) have shown, the flow inside the viscous boundary layer at the bottom leads to the accumulation of the heavier lower-layer fluid near the side wall. Thereby, a bare spot in which the light fluid is in direct contact with the bottom is formed around the axis. The present simulation gives new insight into the internal structures and interaction of the two fluids. Preliminary results indicate strong mixing inside the region of heavy fluid.
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- 2001
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19. Electromagnetic properties of high spin states in158Dy and164Dy
- Author
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H. J. Mang, P. Ring, and Y. K. Gambhir
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Angular momentum ,Total angular momentum quantum number ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Angular momentum of light ,Angular momentum coupling ,Orbital motion ,Rotational transition ,Orbital angular momentum of light ,Angular momentum operator - Abstract
We present calculations of electromagnetic properties of158Dy and164Dy based on the solution of the self-consistent cranking model and approximate angular momentum projection technique developed earlier. The calculated values compare fairly well with the existing experimental data.
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- 1982
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20. Yang-Mills vacuum and the gluon mass
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Markus H. Thoma and H. J. Mang
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Physics ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,High Energy Physics::Lattice ,Nuclear Theory ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Yang–Mills existence and mass gap ,Hartree ,Gluon ,High Energy Physics::Theory ,Transverse plane ,Effective mass (solid-state physics) ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Non-perturbative ,Wave function ,Engineering (miscellaneous) - Abstract
The vacuum sector of the pureSU(3) Yang-Mills theory in temporal gauge has been investigated. A variational calculation based on a BCS trial wave functions is performed. It is shown that this is equivalent to solving the Dyson-Schwinger equation in the Hartree approximation. By extending the Dyson-Schwinger approach, we shown using simple examples that it is possible to obtain an effective mass for the transverse gluons which is generated dynamically by the exchange of longitudinal gluons in a non perturbative vacuum.
- Published
- 1989
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21. Alpha decay theoretical calculations for 125-neutron nuclei
- Author
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L. Marquez, John O. Rasmussen, D. G. Raich, H. J. Mang, and T. Fliessbach
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Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Decay scheme ,Branching fraction ,Nuclear fusion ,Decay theory ,Neutron ,Elementary particle ,Alpha decay ,Decay correct - Abstract
We have applied the new normalized and an older shell-model alpha decay theory to the calculation of decay rates of three 125-neutron isotones209Po,211Rn, and213Ra. We also have applied the theory to the 2.1-ms isomer of213Ra and are able thus to select a 17/2−assignment as preferable to the 13/2+ alternative.
- Published
- 1976
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22. Comment on various (common and uncommon) functions for the motion of a bound alpha particle
- Author
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T Fleissbach and H J Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Alpha (programming language) ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Amplitude ,Simple (abstract algebra) ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Motion (geometry) ,Alpha decay ,Alpha particle ,Mathematical physics - Abstract
Jackson and Rhoades-Brown (ibid., vol.4, no.9, p.1441 (1978)) (JR) have criticised the treatment of alpha decay made by Fliessbach and Mang (1976) (FM). This criticism is based on a misinterpretation of both the bound-state functions introduced by FM and the reduced alpha amplitude as used by many authors. A simple analytic example is presented in which all the quantities occurring are given explicitly.
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- 1978
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23. On the solution of constrained hartree-fock-bogolyubov equations
- Author
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P. Ring, B. Samadi, and H. J. Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,symbols.namesake ,Lagrangian relaxation ,Lagrange multiplier ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Hartree–Fock method ,symbols ,Nuclear fusion ,Elementary particle ,Mathematical physics - Abstract
A method is described to solve constrained HFB-equations without introduction of a Lagrangian multiplier. To demonstrate the versatility of the method rotational bands in164Er and168Yb are calculated.
- Published
- 1976
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24. Normalized shell model alpha decay theory applied to unfavored decay
- Author
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J.O. Rasmussen, H. J. Mang, and T. Fliessbach
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Decay scheme ,Excited state ,SHELL model ,Decay theory ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Alpha decay ,Atomic physics ,Wave function ,Radioactive decay - Abstract
A shell model $alpha$-decay theory is presented which uses correctly antisymmetrized and normalized wave functions. Numerical calculations are performed for the $alpha$-decay constants for unfavored decay of $sup 211$Po and $sup 211$Bi and for hindrance factors of excited $sup 212$Po states. The results are compared with those of the conventional shell model $alpha$ decay theory. (AIP)
- Published
- 1976
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25. Selfconsistent calculation of nuclear equilibrium deformations
- Author
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Klaus Dietrich, J. Pradal, and Hans J. Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Deformation (mechanics) ,Nuclear Theory ,Binding energy ,Canonical transformation ,Linear map ,Bogoliubov transformation ,Classical mechanics ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Nuclear fusion ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon ,Spin (physics) - Abstract
The Bogoliubov method of general linear transformations is applied to a selfconsistent calculation of deformed shapes of Rare Earth Nuclei and light nuclei around Mg24. Nucleon-nucleon forces of finite range and different spin-dependence and exchange character are used. The dependence of the deformation on the particle number and the different components of the nuclear interaction is investigated.
- Published
- 1966
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26. Zum Drei- und Vierk�rperproblem der Kernphysik
- Author
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W. Wild and H. J. Mang
- Subjects
Many-body problem ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Effective mass (solid-state physics) ,Helium-4 ,Quantum mechanics ,Binding energy ,Nuclear fusion ,Perturbation (astronomy) ,Electric potential ,Electric charge - Abstract
The independent pair model has been applied to the nuclear three- and four-body problem. The equations of the model have been solved by a perturbation approach in the case of spin- and charge-independent central two-body forces with hard-core. In lowest order of perturbation theory the nuclear average potential has been approximated by an oscillator potential including an effective mass, the parameters of which were so chosen as to give as nearly a self-consistent potential as possible. For a sqare well two-body interaction the lowest order equations have been solved exactly, the corrections are shown to be small. Some tests for the internal consistency of the approach have been developped and are shown to be well fulfilled by our solutions. According to a proposal byLipkin we succeeded in separating off the energy of the center of mass motion. The results for the binding energy of He4(27,9 MeV), the binding energy of H3 (7,1 MeV), the energy difference between H3 and He3 (0,735 MeV) and the RMS-radius of He4 (1,75f) are in rather good agreement with experimental results.
- Published
- 1959
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27. On the application of the Hartree-Fock-Bogolyubov-equations to a microscopic theory of nuclear rotations
- Author
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R. Beck, H. J. Mang, and P. Ring
- Subjects
Nuclear physics ,Rare earth nuclei ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle model ,Quantum mechanics ,Nuclear Theory ,Hartree–Fock method ,Nuclear fusion ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Microscopic theory ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The Hartree-Fock-Bogolyubov-Equations of the cranking model are used to give a description of nuclear rotations in a general single particle model. Numerical results for some rare earth nuclei are presented.
- Published
- 1970
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28. Calculation ofα-Transition Probabilities
- Author
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Hans J. Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Isotope ,Nuclear shell model ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nuclear physics ,chemistry ,Neutron number ,Neutron ,Alpha decay ,Nuclear Experiment ,Astatine ,Magic number (physics) ,Polonium - Abstract
The decay rates for the ground-state transitions of all polonium isotopes and the odd-even astatine isotopes are discussed on the basis of the nuclear shell model. Good agreement with experimental data is obtained. In particular the behavior of the reduced width as a function of the neutron number around the magic number $N=126$ is well reproduced.
- Published
- 1960
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29. Collective motions and single particle models
- Author
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H J Mang
- Subjects
Physics ,Classical mechanics ,Basis (linear algebra) ,Particle model ,Work (physics) ,Collective model ,Collective motion ,Particle ,Statistical physics ,Connection (mathematics) ,Generator (mathematics) - Abstract
The connection between single particle and collective motion is discussed on the basis of the generator coordinate method. Earlier and recent work on the subject is reviewed.
- Published
- 1972
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30. Comparisons of BCS Nuclear Wave Functions with Exact Solutions. II. Particle-Number-Conserving Method
- Author
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Hans J. Mang, John O. Rasmussen, and Mannque Rho
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle number ,Quantum mechanics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Wave function - Published
- 1966
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31. Symmetry-conserving Hartree-Fock-Bogolyubov-theory and its application to collective nuclear rotation
- Author
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H. J. Mang, R. Beck, and P. Ring
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Special solution ,Nuclear Theory ,Hartree–Fock method ,Rotational symmetry ,symbols.namesake ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Projection method ,symbols ,Nuclear fusion ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) ,Mathematical physics - Abstract
The HFB-Theory is combined with the projection method in order to account for the rotational symmetry of the Hamiltonian. It is shown that the cranking model provides a special solution of the “projected” HFB-Equations which result from a minimization of the projected energy.
- Published
- 1970
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32. Conservation of Particle Number in the Nuclear Pairing Model
- Author
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Jean H. Pradal, Klaus Dietrich, and Hans J. Mang
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Physics ,Amplitude ,Particle number ,Quantum mechanics ,Operator (physics) ,Pairing ,General Physics and Astronomy ,State (functional analysis) ,Function (mathematics) ,Eigenvalues and eigenvectors ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
The Euler-Lagrange equations corresponding to a Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer state that is an eigenstate of the number operator are derived and solved numerically for a $\ensuremath{\delta}$ interaction. The errors due to the nonconservation of particle number in the usual Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory are studied as a function of particle number, level density, and strength of the pairing interaction. A proof is given that for attractive pairing interactions the lowest energy solution corresponds always to real positive probability amplitudes ${v}_{\ensuremath{\nu}}$, ${u}_{\ensuremath{\nu}}$.
- Published
- 1964
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33. Band-Crossing Prediction inHf180
- Author
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H. J. Mang and R. R. Hilton
- Subjects
Physics ,Angular momentum ,Isotope ,Mathematical model ,Excited state ,Nuclear structure ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Deformation (meteorology) ,Approx ,Molecular physics ,Spectral line - Abstract
Giant backbending is predicted to occur in /sup 180/Hf at J approx. = 26 h. The effect is clearly seen to be the result of the crossing of two bands with very different intrinsic structure.
- Published
- 1979
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34. Kernzerfälle und Kernreaktionen
- Author
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H. J. Mang
- Abstract
Kerntechnik ist die Umwandlung von Kernbindungsenergie in „nutzbare Energieformen“, wie Warme, mechanische und elektrische Energie. Die Kernprozesse, die dazu ausgenutzt werden konnen, sind im Prinzip alle Kernzerfalle und exothermen Kernreaktionen. Die Energie, die im Einzelprozes (Zerfall oder Reaktion) gewonnen wird, ergibt sich aus der Energiebilanz des Prozesses. Die Leistung (Energie pro Zeit) wird zusatzlich durch die Zerfalls- oder Reaktionshaufigkeit wesentlich mitbestimmt. Es gilt im einzelnen: $$\textup{Leistung}=\frac{\textup{Zerfallsenergie} \times \textup{Zerfallsh}\ddot{\textup{a}}\textup{ufigkeit}}{\textup{Reaktionsenergie} \times \textup{Reaktionsh}\ddot{\textup{a}}\textup{ufigkeit}}$$ Im folgenden sollen deshalb Energiebilanz und Haufigkeit fur Kernzerfalle und Kernreaktionen untersucht werden.
- Published
- 1982
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35. The Louisiana law of informed consent
- Author
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H J, Mang and S C, Judice
- Subjects
Informed Consent ,Vesicovaginal Fistula ,Malpractice ,Humans ,Female ,Hysterectomy ,Louisiana - Published
- 1986
36. Disclosure of medical records and patient information: a legislative restriction
- Author
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H J, Mang
- Subjects
Information Dissemination ,Louisiana ,Confidentiality ,Medical Records - Published
- 1986
37. Problems Connected with the Theory and Measurement of α-γ — Angular Correlation
- Author
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H. J. Mang
- Subjects
Angular correlation ,Mathematical analysis ,Computer Science::Databases ,Mathematics - Abstract
This talk will consist of two parts. In a first part I shall discuss the information on nuclear properties which can be obtained from angular correlation measurements. The second part will deal with a few selected experiments.
- Published
- 1971
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38. On the coexistence of deformed and spherical states in Odd-Mass Nuclei
- Author
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F. Krmpotić, H. J. Mang, and S. M. Abecasis
- Subjects
Coupling ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,States ,Proton ,Física ,Unified Model ,Odd-Mass Nuclei ,Spherical model ,Excited state ,Particle ,Nuclear fusion ,Atomic physics ,Ciencias Exactas - Abstract
The problem of coexisting deformed and spherical states in Odd-Mass Nuclei is discussed within the framework of the Unified Model. The emphasis is made on the coupling between such states. Numerical calculations were performed for 115In. The basic spherical states are either 116Sn plus a (proton) hole or 114Cd plus a (proton) particle. The agreement between calculated and experimental quantities is rather good., Departamento de Física
- Published
- 1973
39. NUCLEAR STRUCTURE CALCULATONS FOR DEFORMED NUCLEI
- Author
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Hans J. Mang, K. Dietrich, and J. Pradal
- Subjects
Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Magnetic moment ,Nuclear structure ,Nucleon - Published
- 1964
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40. Selfconsistent Calculation of Nuclear Equilibrium Deformations
- Author
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K. Dietrich, H. J. Mang, and J. Pradal
- Published
- 1964
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41. Zur Theorie des α-Zerfalls
- Author
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H. J. Mang
- Published
- 1959
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42. Economic and Efficient: Introducing the Bifurcation-Invisible Sign in Endovascular Thrombectomy for Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusions.
- Author
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Zhao B, Wang C, Liang W, Zhao Z, and Mang J
- Abstract
Introduction Selecting thrombectomy techniques for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion (LVO) significantly affects outcomes and costs. This study introduces the Bifurcation-Invisible (BI) sign identified on initial microcatheter angiogram in acute middle cerebral artery occlusions before endovascular thrombectomy. We aimed to evaluate whether this sign is associated with better angiographic outcomes using contact aspiration (CA) versus stent retriever (SR). Methods In this study, we reviewed 285 cases of acute M1-segment middle cerebral artery (M1-MCA) occlusions treated with stent retriever (SR) or contact aspiration (CA). Angiographic success was evaluated using modified Thrombolysis In Cerebral Infarction (mTICI) scores after the first attempt, clinical outcomes by 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores, and procedural costs were analyzed. Categorical variables were analyzed using χ2 or Fisher's exact test, and continuous variables using Student's t-test or Mann-Whitney U test. Subgroup multivariate logistic analysis and interaction tests were conducted, with post-hoc analysis applying Bonferroni correction. Results BI-positive patients treated with CA had higher first-pass reperfusion rates (mTICI 2b-3: 64.0% vs. 41.3%, p = 0.005; Bonferroni-corrected p = 0.030) and 19.8% lower device costs (p < 0.05) than those treated with SR. BI-positive CA patients had higher first-pass reperfusion rates (mTICI 2b-3: 64.0% vs. 32.1%; p < 0.001; Bonferroni-corrected p = 0.002) and a 39.9% reduction in device costs (p < 0.05) than BI-negative patients. The interaction tests showed significant interactions between the presence of BI and contact aspiration for first-pass reperfusion rates (p = 0.007) and device costs (p ˂ 0.001). Conclusion The BI sign, a refined version of the BSO sign identified via microcatheter angiography, could guide the selection of contact aspiration, improving recanalization rates and reducing costs in MCA occlusions., (S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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43. Systemic inflammation following traumatic injury and its impact on neuroinflammatory gene expression in the rodent brain.
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Rowe CJ, Nwaolu U, Martin L, Huang BJ, Mang J, Salinas D, Schlaff CD, Ghenbot S, Lansford JL, Potter BK, Schobel SA, Gann ER, and Davis TA
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- Animals, Rats, Male, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Gene Expression, Gene Expression Regulation, Brain metabolism, Brain pathology, Inflammation metabolism, Neuroinflammatory Diseases metabolism, Neuroinflammatory Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Background: Trauma can result in systemic inflammation that leads to organ dysfunction, but the impact on the brain, particularly following extracranial insults, has been largely overlooked., Methods: Building upon our prior findings, we aimed to understand the impact of systemic inflammation on neuroinflammatory gene transcripts in eight brain regions in rats exposed to (1) blast overpressure exposure [BOP], (2) cutaneous thermal injury [BU], (3) complex extremity injury, 3 hours (h) of tourniquet-induced ischemia, and hind limb amputation [CEI+tI+HLA], (4) BOP+BU or (5) BOP+CEI and delayed HLA [BOP+CEI+dHLA] at 6, 24, and 168 h post-injury (hpi)., Results: Globally, the number and magnitude of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) correlated with injury severity, systemic inflammation markers, and end-organ damage, driven by several chemokines/cytokines (Csf3, Cxcr2, Il16, and Tgfb2), neurosteroids/prostaglandins (Cyp19a1, Ptger2, and Ptger3), and markers of neurodegeneration (Gfap, Grin2b, and Homer1). Regional neuroinflammatory activity was least impacted following BOP. Non-blast trauma (in the BU and CEI+tI+HLA groups) contributed to an earlier, robust and diverse neuroinflammatory response across brain regions (up to 2-50-fold greater than that in the BOP group), while combined trauma (in the BOP+CEI+dHLA group) significantly advanced neuroinflammation in all regions except for the cerebellum. In contrast, BOP+BU resulted in differential activity of several critical neuroinflammatory-neurodegenerative markers compared to BU. t-SNE plots of DEGs demonstrated that the onset, extent, and duration of the inflammatory response are brain region dependent. Regardless of injury type, the thalamus and hypothalamus, which are critical for maintaining homeostasis, had the most DEGs. Our results indicate that neuroinflammation in all groups progressively increased or remained at peak levels over the study duration, while markers of end-organ dysfunction decreased or otherwise resolved., Conclusions: Collectively, these findings emphasize the brain's sensitivity to mediators of systemic inflammation and provide an example of immune-brain crosstalk. Follow-on molecular and behavioral investigations are warranted to understand the short- to long-term pathophysiological consequences on the brain, particularly the mechanism of blood-brain barrier breakdown, immune cell penetration-activation, and microglial activation., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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44. Exploring sleep duration and clinical reasoning process in resident physicians: a thematic analysis.
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Collen J, Durning S, Berk J, Mang J, Alcover K, and Jung E
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Clinical Competence statistics & numerical data, Diagnostic Errors prevention & control, Physicians psychology, Physicians statistics & numerical data, Sleep Deprivation diagnosis, Sleep Deprivation physiopathology, Sleep Duration, Clinical Reasoning, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
Study Objectives: Connecting resident physician work hours and sleep deprivation to adverse outcomes has been difficult. Our study explores clinical reasoning rather than outcomes. Diagnostic errors are a leading cause of medical error and may result from deficits in clinical reasoning. We used simulated cases to explore relationships between sleep duration and diagnostic reasoning., Methods: Residents were recruited for a 2-month study (inpatient/outpatient). Each participant's sleep was tracked (sleep diary/actigraphy). At the end of each month, residents watched 2 brief simulated clinical encounters and performed "think alouds" of their clinical reasoning. In each session, 1 video was straightforward and the other video contained distracting contextual factors. Sessions were recorded, transcribed, and interpreted. We conducted a thematic analysis using a constant comparative approach. Themes were compared based on sleep duration and contextual factors., Results: Residents (n = 17) slept more during outpatient compared with inpatient months (450.5 ± 7.13 vs 425.6 ± 10.78 hours, P = .02). We found the following diagnostic reasoning themes: uncertainty, disorganized knowledge, error, semantic incompetence, emotional content, and organized knowledge. Themes reflecting suboptimal clinical reasoning (disorganized knowledge, error, semantic incompetence, uncertainty) were observed more in cases with contextual factors (distractors). "Think alouds" from cases with contextual factors following sleep restriction had a greater number of themes concerning for problematic diagnostic reasoning., Conclusions: Residents obtained significantly more sleep during outpatient compared with inpatient months. Several negative clinical reasoning themes emerged with less sleep combined with cases containing contextual distractors. Our findings reinforce the importance of adequate sleep and supervision in house officers, particularly in cases with distracting elements., Citation: Collen J, Durning S, Berk J, Mang J, Alcover K, Jung E. Exploring sleep duration and clinical reasoning process in resident physicians: a thematic analysis. J Clin Sleep Med . 2024;20(8):1279-1289., (© 2024 American Academy of Sleep Medicine.)
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- 2024
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45. Retrospective analysis of the perioperative outcome in living donor kidney transplantation with multiple renal arteries: does accessory vessel ligation affect the outcome?
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Schmidt J, Peters R, Mang J, Ralla B, Moldovan DE, Dagnæs-Hansen J, Liefeldt L, Budde K, Lerchbaumer M, and Friedersdorff F
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- Humans, Renal Artery surgery, Living Donors, Retrospective Studies, Graft Survival, Kidney diagnostic imaging, Kidney surgery, Kidney blood supply, Treatment Outcome, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose: Accurate surgical reconstruction of arterial vascular supply is a crucial part of living kidney transplantation (LDKT). The presence of multiple renal arteries (MRA) in grafts can be challenging. In the present study, we investigated the impact of ligation versus anastomosis of small accessory graft arteries on the perioperative outcome., Methods: Clinical and radiological outcomes of 51 patients with MRA out of a total of 308 patients who underwent LDKT with MRA between 2011 and 2020 were stratified in two groups and analyzed. In group 1 (20 patients), ligation of accessory arteries (ARAs) and group 2 (31 patients) anastomosis of ARAs was performed., Results: Significant differences were observed in the anastomosis-, surgery-, and warm ischemia time (WIT) in favor of group 1. Students t-test showed comparable serum creatinine levels of 2.33 (± 1.75) to 1.68 (± 0.83) mg/dL in group 1 and 2.63 (± 2.47) to 1.50 (± 0.41) mg/dL in group 2, were seen from 1 week to 1 year after transplant. No increased rates of Delayed graft function (DGF), primary transplant dysfunction and transplant rejection were seen, but graft loss and revision rates were slightly higher when the ARAs were ligated. Analysis of Doppler sonography revealed that segmental perfusion deficits tend to regenerate during the clinical course., Conclusion: Ligation of smaller accessory renal arteries may not affect the outcome of living kidney transplantation, except for a minor increase in the reoperation rate. Segmental perfusion deficits of the graft seem to regenerate in most cases as seen in Doppler sonography., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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46. Transplant nephrectomy: indication, surgical approach and complications-experiences from a single transplantation center.
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Mang J, Haag J, Liefeldt L, Budde K, Peters R, Hofbauer SL, Schulz M, Weinberger S, Dagnæs-Hansen J, Maxeiner A, Ralla B, and Friedersdorff F
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Transplantation, Homologous, Graft Survival, Nephrectomy adverse effects, Kidney
- Abstract
Purpose: Management of a failed kidney allograft, and the question whether it should be removed is a challenging task for clinicians. The reported risks for transplant nephrectomy (TN) vary, and there is no clear recommendation on indications or surgical approach that should be used. This study gives an overview of indications, compares surgical techniques, and identifies risk factors for higher morbidity., Methods: Retrospective analysis was conducted on all transplant nephrectomies performed between 2005 and 2020 at Charité Hospital Berlin, Department of Urology. Patient demographics, laboratory parameters, graft survival data, indication for TN, and surgical complications were extracted from medical reports., Results: A total of 195 TN were performed, with graft intolerance syndrome being the most common indication in 52 patients (26.7%), acute rejection in 36 (18.5%), acute infection in 30 (15.4%), and other reasons to stop immunosuppression in 26 patients (13.3%). Rare indications were vascular complications in 16 (8.2%) and malignancies in the allograft in six (3.1%) cases. Extracapsular surgical approach was significantly more often used in cases of vascular complications and earlier allograft removal, but there was no difference in complication rates between extra- and intracapsular approach. Acute infection was identified as an independent risk factor for a complication grade IIIb or higher according to Clavien-Dindo classification, with a HR of 12.3 (CI 2.2-67.7; p = 0.004)., Conclusion: Transplant nephrectomy should only be performed when there is a good indication, and non-elective surgery should be avoided, when possible, as it increases morbidity., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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47. Angiographic Pattern of M1 Stenosis Predicts Territorial Stroke in Patients Receiving Aggressive Medication without Stenting.
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Jiang X, Liang W, Zhao Z, Zhao B, Yan L, and Mang J
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- Humans, Constriction, Pathologic complications, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Cerebral Infarction complications, Stents, Stroke etiology, Stroke complications, Ischemic Attack, Transient diagnostic imaging, Ischemic Attack, Transient etiology, Intracranial Arteriosclerosis complications
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the relationship between different angiographic patterns of middle cerebral artery M1 segment stenosis and related territorial stroke in patients receiving aggressive medical treatment without stenting., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed our patient registry database to identify ICAS patients diagnosed by digital subtraction angiography between January 2017 and December 2020 and identified 3 different angiographic patterns (normal, shift, and dilation) in 124 patients with M1 stenosis. The association between these patterns and recurrent ischemic stroke in the M1 territory was analyzed., Results: The rates of recurrent M1 territorial stroke and transient ischemic attack in the normal group, shift group, dilation group and shift-dilation group were 34.5%, 35.0%, 78.3%, and 44.4% respectively. In patients with the shift pattern, the rate of recurrent stroke is significantly higher at a deflection angle ≥9.32° than at a deflection angle <9.32°(P < 0.05). In patients with dilation pattern, the rate of recurrent stroke is significantly higher than patients with non-dilation pattern (72.3% vs. 36.8%, P < 0.05)., Conclusions: Angiographic patterns of M1 stenosis may predict recurrent territorial strokes, thus providing a surrogate marker to identify high-risk patients for potential endovascular treatment., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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48. Revisiting the role of TEG-PM in stroke prevention by drug selection for mono-antiplatelet medication following dual-antiplatelet treatment.
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Yan L, Liang W, Zhao B, Zhao Z, Zhang K, Wang L, and Mang J
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- Humans, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors therapeutic use, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors adverse effects, Thrombelastography, Retrospective Studies, Drug Therapy, Combination, Ischemic Attack, Transient drug therapy, Ischemic Attack, Transient prevention & control, Stroke drug therapy, Stroke prevention & control
- Abstract
Backgrounds: Dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with aspirin and clopidogrel for minor strokes or TIAs has been demonstrated in several RCTs. Whether drug selection for mono-antiplatelet therapy (MAPT) following DAPT may influence stroke recurrence has not been clarified, especially for patients with intracranial atherosclerosis stenosis (ICAS). The Thrombelastography Platelet Mapping (TEG-PM) assay claimed to be capable of monitoring platelet function secondary to antiplatelet therapy., Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the preventive role of TEG-PM in individualized drug selection for MAPT following DAPT in patients with minor stroke or TIA., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed our patient database to identify individuals with minor stroke or TIA between February 2019 and July 2022. Patients were divided into ICAS and non-ICAS groups, and the efficacy and safety of TEG-PM-guided MAPT for stroke prevention after minor stroke or TIA were investigated in each group., Results: ICAS patients with TEG-PM-guided MAPT had lower rates of recurrent stroke than patients without TEG-PM guidance during a mean follow-up period of 18.1 months (6.3% vs 15.2%; p = 0.04). Patients without ICAS also tended to benefit from TEG-PM-guided MAPT with lower rates of stroke recurrence (2.6% vs 8.7%; p = 0.02). No difference in the safety outcome of any bleeding events was observed in patients with TEG-PM-guided MAPT and those without (ICAS group, 2.1% vs 3.0%; p = 0.68; non-ICAS group, 1.3% vs 2.3%; p = 0.79)., Conclusion: The TEG-PM could be a tangible preprocessing in drug selection for MAPT following DAPT in patients with minor strokes or TIAs, especially for those with non-stented ICASs.
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- 2024
49. Revisiting the Predictive Role of Truncal-Type Occlusion Sign for Acute Large Vessel Stroke Treated by Endovascular Thrombectomy: A Scoping Review.
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Zhao B, Liang W, Jiang X, Zhao Z, Yan L, Mang J, and Xu Z
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- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Ischemic Stroke diagnosis, Ischemic Stroke etiology, Ischemic Stroke physiopathology, Ischemic Stroke therapy, Predictive Value of Tests, Thrombectomy adverse effects
- Abstract
Introduction: The truncal-type occlusion (TTO) sign observed during endovascular thrombectomy is thought to predict the etiology and prognosis of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion (LVO). However, the interpretation of the present results and the clinical utility of this sign need further investigation. This scoping meta-review aimed to assess the predictive value of the TTO sign, thus identifying methodological limitations in current study designs., Methods: Studies published up to January 2023 were identified by systematically searching PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science. A meta-analysis was performed to quantitatively synthesize the evidence on the predictive value of the TTO sign. An 8-point scale was introduced to narratively summarize the current evidence level and methodological quality of included studies., Results: We included 10 studies in this review. For the prediction of intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio (PLR), and negative likelihood ratio (NLR) of the TTO sign were 0.73, 0.87, 5.5, and 0.31, respectively (all p < 0.05). For recanalization failure after primary thrombectomy, the sensitivity, specificity, PLR, and NLR were 0.44, 0.91, 4.9, and 0.61, respectively (all p < 0.05). The strength of evidence was low due to the methodological limitations and lack of adjustment for potential confounders., Conclusion: The predictive values of the TTO sign for the etiology of LVO-AIS were considerable but seemed limited for current interpretation. Several confounders could influence the determination and predictive value of the TTO sign, requiring methodological adjustments in future research. Endovascular practitioners encountering this sign during thrombectomy should draw specific attention to stroke etiology, thus promoting timely adjustment of intra- and postprocedural strategies., (© 2023 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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50. Drawing time-density curve with Fiji/ImageJ: An alternative approach for parametric coding of cerebral digital subtraction angiography.
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Zhao Z, Liang W, Zhao B, Zhang K, Wang L, and Mang J
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- Humans, Angiography, Digital Subtraction methods, Hemodynamics, Carotid Artery, Internal, Cerebral Angiography methods, Ischemic Stroke, Cerebrovascular Disorders
- Abstract
Background: Quantitative spatiotemporal analysis of digital subtraction angiography could support clinical decision making for the management of cerebral vascular disease. However, there is a lack of free and user-friendly applications. The objective of our study is to devise a free and simple solution for parametric coding of digital subtraction angiography., New Method: By driving the time-density curves in the region of interest, the digital subtraction angiography images were color-coded and quantitatively analyzed using fully open-source and free software (Fiji/ImageJ). The similarity factor (f
2 ) was used to compare the resolution profiles between time-density curves generated with commercial software on the Siemens workstation (syngo iFlow, Siemens Healthcare, Berlin, Germany) and our method., Results and Comparison With Existing Method: Sixteen patients diagnosed with acute ischemic stroke resulting from acute occlusion of the distal internal carotid artery or the first segment of the middle cerebral artery were selected for analysis. Angiography images were successfully processed with syngo iFlow and Fiji/ImageJ. The images processed with Fiji/ImageJ provided excellent anatomic and hemodynamic details. In all patients, the similarity factor (f2 ) values of the time-density curves derived from the same region of interest were 99.90 (range 99.85-99.95)., Conclusions: The ImageJ/Fiji software provides a user-friendly and free alternative for parametric coding of digital subtraction angiography., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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